Why China's dramatic economic recovery might not add up
Beijing
prompted envy, admiration and not a little resentment when it released
data last week confirming that it was the first major economy to start
growing again after the devastation caused by Covid-19 in the first half
of the year.To get more China economy news, you can visit shine news official website.
China
appeared to have achieved the V-shaped recovery being chased by finance
ministers around the world, after pioneering mass lockdowns to contain
the virus that had taken hold in Wuhan, then shutting its borders to
stop it filtering back in from abroad.
With the country largely
virus-free, people could return to something like normal life in
offices, schools, shops and restaurants, and the government encouraged a
splurge in investment across infrastructure and new manufacturing.
Government
data showed growth of 4.9% between July and September, slightly lower
than economists had expected, but still an astonishing
achievement.Analysts have warned, however, that apparent data
manipulation, and the details of how China returned to growth – relying
more on investment than consumption – raise questions about the strength
and durability of the economic revival.
Nick Marro, lead analyst
on global trade at the Economist Intelligence Unit, said the figures
appeared to show a shuffling of some data to boost the overall GDP
growth rate for the third quarter, although he cautioned there was no
direct evidence of any data fabrication.
“The Chinese statistical
agency is opaque about their methodology, and unless we get more
details about their adjustments, we’ll never know the full story. But
there does seem to be evidence of a targeted adjustment to help lift
that headline figure,” he said.
“The September figures were
smoothed by quietly altering the historic basis of comparison;
basically, some of the numbers from September 2019 were re-apportioned
into October of that year, in order to lower the comparison base. That
led to a statistical distortion where the September 2020 growth figures
might’ve been artificially inflated.”
The difference in growth
rate was not huge, Marro said, but the manipulation suggested the
economy might not be as strong as Beijing would have liked people to
think. “The bigger implication is that the investment landscape might be
more fragile than the official numbers suggest heading into the last
quarter of 2020. That’s perhaps the bigger risk for companies to be
aware of.”
Leland Miller, chief executive of the China Beige Book
consultancy, which tracks the Chinese economy with data it collects
itself in addition to government statistics, flagged up what he
considered a far more disturbing alteration in the data.
China
recorded growth of 0.8% in fixed-asset investment for the first three
quarters of the year, compared with 2019, but the absolute figures for
the same period showed a drop of several trillion yuan. “This is not
toying at the margin. This is making 2.5 trillion yuan in fixed asset
investment disappear,” he said.
The only explanation given by
Chinese authorities for the discrepancy was that the data had been
adjusted to reflect “results of the fourth national economic census,
statistical law enforcement and regulation of statistical programmes”,
so economists have no way to assess how accurate the revisions are or
compare them to other data.
If fixed-asset investment had
actually fallen, as the raw data suggested, while consumption was also
down, overall GDP growth could be much lower than the headline figure,
Miller said. “There are very big lessons here, because people think that
China’s back. They’ve done a pretty good job but ... they’re not
anywhere near being back to where they were before.”
Meanwhile
the pandemic has pushed many western companies to reconsider their
dependence on Chinese factories. And while Beijing has for several years
called for a “rebalancing” of the economy to boost domestic
consumption, it has struggled to make it a reality.
Other
long-term challenges including debt and an ageing population have been
overshadowed by coronavirus temporarily, but remain no less
problematic.“Even if growth leaps from a low base next year there are
still underlying structural problems,” said George Magnus, former chief
economist at UBS, and an associate at the China Centre, Oxford
University.
“These include growing debt, demographics, poor
productivity, a much more hostile external environment for trade,
commerce and investment. All of these things are going to weigh on
China’s potential for expansion and development.”